1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates to techniques for text entry input into a search interface that assists users in both stages of text entry, including (1) locating the desired characters without having to look at the physical text entry device and (2) selecting the desired character or symbol.
2. Description of Related Art
User interface options to enter text input to a television using a remote control are currently very limited and cumbersome. Some remote controls just have numerals and do not have alphabets on the keypad as illustrated in
Two prominent options for text entry input to television in practice today are (1) keypad based text entry and (2) “navigation and select” based text entry. Most keypad text entry interfaces in use today require the user to look at the remote control device to locate a character. This makes the interface hard to use, because the user has to toggle his visual focus between the remote control and the television screen. Additionally, looking at the remote control while watching television is cumbersome since the ambient lighting in the room may not be sufficient to see the remote control (e.g. watching television at night and in the dark).
Current “navigation and select” interfaces are also lacking, because the planar navigation distance is quite high in some of the popular interfaces for text entry, such as TIVO® (
An interface that can assist the user to (1) locate the desired character without having to look at the remote control and (2) select the located character easily from an overloaded keypad (or from an input device lacking a keypad), would significantly reduce the effort expended by the user to enter text.
The invention provides methods and systems enabling a user to enter text into a search interface. The methods and systems allow the user to enter text without looking at the physical text entry device.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a user-interface system for entering an alphanumeric string for identifying information content has presentation logic for displaying an image of a virtual user alphanumeric interface on a presentation device. The virtual user alphanumeric interface includes an image of an overloaded keypad that has a two dimensional configuration of alphanumeric clusters. Each cluster corresponds to a set of selectable alphanumeric characters. The virtual user alphanumeric interface further includes a string field for displaying the alphanumeric string of selected alphanumeric characters. The user-interface system also has selection logic for receiving user actions from an input device to select an alphanumeric cluster and to select an alphanumeric character from the set of selectable alphanumeric characters corresponding to the selected cluster to cause the selected character to be displayed in the string field of the virtual user alphanumeric interface.
In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, a user-interface system for entering at least one alphanumeric cluster for identifying information content has presentation logic for displaying an image of a virtual user alphanumeric interface on a presentation device. The virtual user alphanumeric interface includes an image of an overloaded keypad that has a two dimensional configuration of alphanumeric clusters. Each cluster corresponds to a set of alphanumeric characters. The virtual user alphanumeric interface further includes a display field for displaying at least one selected alphanumeric cluster. The user-interface system also has cluster selection logic for receiving user actions from an input device to select an alphanumeric cluster and to cause the selected alphanumeric cluster to be displayed in the display field of the virtual user alphanumeric interface. The user-interface system can also have character selection logic for receiving user actions from the input device to select an alphanumeric character from the set of alphanumeric characters corresponding to the selected cluster and causing the selected character to be visually emphasized in the display field of the virtual user alphanumeric interface.
According to one or more embodiments, each character of at least one of the sets of selectable alphanumeric characters is selectable by acting only on the corresponding cluster.
According to one or more embodiments, the presentation device is separate from the input device so that the user can enter the alphanumeric string while focusing on the presentation device.
According to one or more embodiments, an alphanumeric cluster is selectable via a cluster selection action and a cluster-character selection action selects one of the alphanumeric characters corresponding to the selected cluster.
According to one or more embodiments, the cluster selection action is pressing one of a plurality of buttons on the input device, the button pressed being mapped to a desired alphanumeric cluster of the virtual user alphanumeric interface. According to one or more embodiments, the cluster selection action is a planar navigation action on the input device.
According to one or more embodiments, the cluster-character selection action is pressing one of a plurality of buttons on the input device, the button pressed being mapped to the alphanumeric clusters of the virtual user alphanumeric interface corresponding to a desired alphanumeric character. According to one or more embodiments, the cluster-character selection action is pressing a character selection button on the input device.
According to one or more embodiments, the set of selectable alphanumeric characters of at least one cluster is presented in alphabetical order. According to one or more embodiments, the set of selectable alphanumeric characters of at least one cluster is presented in an order according to an alphabet occurrence frequency of a predetermined language. According to one or more embodiments, the set of selectable alphanumeric characters of at least one cluster is presented in an order according to an alphabet occurrence frequency of characters in words that describe items in a searchable collection of information content. According to one or more embodiments, a presentation order of the set of selectable alphanumeric characters of at least one cluster is changed from an initial presentation order based on the received user actions.
According to one or more embodiments, a user-interface system also has display logic to visually emphasize the selected alphanumeric cluster. According to one or more embodiments, a user-interface system also has display logic to visually emphasize the selected alphanumeric character.
For a more complete understanding of various embodiments of the present invention, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
Preferred embodiments of the invention provide techniques for assisting a user to enter text into a search interface. These techniques include providing for visual cooperation between a remote control text entry device and a display device. These techniques facilitate text entry without the need to look back-and-forth between the remote control device and display device while entering text, and facilitate entry for capability limited input devices, such as five button interfaces. A television remote control (e.g., with five button control) and television screen is one example of a pair of devices that can benefit from aspects of the invention. Examples involving television systems are provided below, in part because of the well-known nature of televisions. Thus, embodiments can be used to search for content items that can be displayed on televisions, e.g., television shows or movies. However, use of the invention is not limited to television systems and television content, as aspects of the invention are useful to any interface requiring text input.
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As used herein, the term “overloaded” used in reference to keys, keypads, or keyboards describes a condition where a cluster of multiple different letters or numerals are associated with a single key, and one or more of the letters or the numeral of the cluster can be selected using a single key, whether by pressing the key a single time or by pressing the key multiple times. The 2-9 digit keys of a mobile telephone implementation of the T9® text input method are examples of what is meant by overloaded keys because, for example, pressing the 2 digit key can enter the letters A, B, C, or the numeral 2. Another example of overloaded keys are the 2-9 digits of a mobile telephone implementation of the multi-tap text entry method where the user can cycle through the letters and numeral of a single key by pressing the single key multiple times in sequence. The term overloaded is not meant to apply to traditional QWERTY keyboards, or similar keyboards, that require the keyboard user to press an additional key to access an additional character set. Thus, the 4 key of a typical QWERTY keyboard is not considered overloaded because the Shift key must be engaged in order to access the $ symbol associated with the 4 key.
The on-screen virtual keypad interface provides sufficient visual cues for both the stages of text input without having to look at the remote control (1) for the user to navigate to a key and (2) to select a particular character from the overloaded key. For instance, text may be entered using planar navigation, wherein an on-screen cursor is manipulated using a five-button interface 304 (
The virtual keypad of the embodiment can be used to assist in both multi-press style input 309 and single press style text input (e.g., T9® style input 313 or “VTAP” style text input 314 described below). T9® style input enables the user to enter each character of the query string by a single press on an overloaded keypad. User gets to a desired word from a choice of multiple words generated by the ambiguous text entry. The VTAP style text input is similar to T9® in that it enables user to get to a desired result for a corresponding search input where a single key press for each character forms the text entry of the query string. The VTAP style text input differs from T9® in that ambiguous text input generates search results matching the ambiguous sequence of letters rather than merely returning possible word choices that form the query itself. Thus, one example of a VTAP style text input results in all letters and numerals associated with the particular key pressed being entered into a single character position of the search input. In VTAP style input, the input query could be either a single word or word prefix input (matching a single word or multiple phrase prefixes) or a multi-phrase word or prefix input (matching a multiple phrase prefixes). Additional aspects of the VTAP style text input are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/312,908, filed on Dec. 20, 2005, entitled Method and System For Dynamically Processing Ambiguous, Reduced Text Search Queries and Highlighting Results Thereof, hereby incorporated by reference.
In the case of direct key selection on the device, be it a multi-press 309 or single press 310 style input, the on-screen keypad 306 of the embodiment provides a visual cue in the form a highlighted key that helps orient the user on the physical device keypad. Furthermore, the highlight of the last key pressed is made persistent so as to maintain the user's orientation on the physical device keypad when selecting the next character. In the case of the planar navigation method (using, for example, a five-button interface 304), user can cycle through the characters of the overloaded key cluster by pressing the central button in the five-button interface (
For example, the maximum traversal path on the keypad of
Once the user selects a key by either of the methods 401 or 402, user then navigates through the character cluster as described earlier 403. The users' choice is then automatically selected 405 once the timeout expires 404. If the user presses the center button in the five-button interface within the timeout period, then the next character in the character cluster is highlighted on the screen 306. The ease of cycling through the characters with just the press of a button, where the collating sequence on the key is rendered on the on-screen keypad, is a much less of a cognitive task than linearly navigating a larger space. The trade-off here is the potential tension introduced in the user's mind due to the timeout based auto-selection. Adjusting the timeout period dynamically to match the user's planar navigation rate can reduce this potential tension. The timeout may be adjustable by the user or the system may automatically adjust the timeout based on the user's interaction with the system. For example, based on the user's linear navigation rate (or the latency between inter-key press latency), the threshold for timeout for auto-selection could be adjusted. While this will always have a minimum threshold, this value could be higher for a person who is navigating the keypad very slowly.
In another embodiment of the invention, the collating sequence may be based on the actual frequency of occurrence of characters in the results space terms. The ordering sequence may even be dynamic based on the frequency of the alphabet from a particular set of data spaces (instead of just English), and the ordering itself could be a function of the character count user entered. The specialized collating sequence of character clusters (which is either statically or dynamically determined as described above) would obviate the need to even etch the alphabets on the physical remote control keypads since that ordering is subject to change dynamically. Thus the on-screen virtual keypad with visual cues enables all existing remote controls (even ones lacking letters, such as the one with numbers only as shown in
In this example embodiment, the interface is used for an information retrieval system where the ambiguous text input could be disambiguated using a results space with relevance associated with each result. Thus, rather than presenting user with choices of search terms matching the ambiguous text entry, user is presented with results matching the ambiguous text input. If the user does not retrieve the results of interest, user can navigate through any of the character keys he pressed and disambiguate each character 901, as shown in
Embodiments described above may be used with the techniques and systems described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/136,261, filed on May 24, 2005, entitled Method and System for Performing Searches for Television Programming Using Reduced Text Input, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/246,432, filed on Oct. 7, 2005, entitled Method and System for Incremental Search With Reduced Text Entry Where the Relevance of Results is a Dynamically Computed Function of User Input Search String Character Count, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference. However, the techniques and system described in those applications are not necessary to practice the following invention. Thus, the embodiments described above can be used with other applications requiring text entry.
It will be appreciated that the scope of the present invention is not limited to the above-described embodiments, but rather is defined by the appended claims, and these claims will encompass modifications of and improvements to what has been described. For example, embodiments have been described in terms of entering text search queries using a 12-key keypad image. However, keypad images having a higher number of letters per key, and therefore fewer keys may be used with aspects of the invention.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/711,867, filed on Aug. 26, 2005, entitled User Interface for Text Entry Input to a Television, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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